U Ili E MIMI V,.l'.ii 2 ig'• - Ite,gi-sttf. RCiBT,IIOII/ELL, Ja, -ALLENTOWN, PA., MAR 27,1872 Btu Omura Dims has ventilated his anti mcnarehical ideas in the British Parliament, and the reception which Ito met shows very plainly that England is not ready fora ropub. lio yet. But it is something to have the cost of royalty talked about { and the royalists aro 'doing all they can to help Sir Charles and his cause when they indulge in such disorderly demonstrations as were made Tuesday night when Sir Charles introduced his motion. Re publicanism cannot be hooted down, not even in England. . A RECENT Washington dispatch reports Gen. Grant as saving that he had made, and should make, no personal effort to secure his renomi nation, and that if the National Convention at Philadelphia should see fit to nominate any other person that person should receive his cordial support. We commend the spirit of those remarks to some of those gtntlemen who have proclaimed in advance that they will not support Gun. Grant in case of his renomina tion, and that for this reason the Republican Convention ought to nominate some other Bnnuncic made one of the best remarks of his life the other day when somebody accused him of inconsistency because ho now held dif ferent opinions upon a certain subject from what ho had entertained twenty years ago. 'After calmly hearing his opponent through the German premier quietly remarked that he was very glad not to belong to that chits of men who are too narrow minded to change their opinions when they become convinced that a change is in accordance -with what is right and true. There is sound w adorn and sense in this idea, and it Is applicable to all latitudes. THERE is some significance In the fact that tho btormon women of 'Utah turned out in force on Monday and voted for the adoption of the proposed State Constitution. Their an xiety for having Utah become a State is at. tributed to their belief that this will kill poly. gamy, an opinion which is tolerably well founded. Utah cannot become a State until polygamy is either given up or placed in the way of being given up, and the Mornian wo• men, despite the extraordinary privileges of plural marriages, seem to be willing to abandon the moral foulness of polygamy for the clean liness of monogamy. JUDGE DAVIS has not accepted the Labor Re. form nomination for the Presidency, and It is not certain that ho will accept it. Judge Da vis has a very comfortable place on the 9u• preme Bench, and he probably thinks that the mere fact of having a nomination offered him is not so big a thing after all. It is ens. enough to nominate a presidential candidate, but it is not so easy for a few men to nominate a can didate and then persuade the rest of the coun try to help elect him. The Laborßeform men have no hope of success without the help of either the Republican or Democratic parties, and there is at present no very brilliant pros pect of either of those parties accepting Judge Davis. At any rate Hie Republican party will not, and the Democrats do not yet know what they will do. THE New York Tribune Is either under the management of mon of no principle whatever or else it has been badly victimized during the past few months. Its reflections upon the Ad ministration have been 'nfamous and it has permitted its correspondents to nut words into the mouths of prominent men which they would scorn to utter. Equivslent•with these publications are its attacks and vile inuendoes ogainst General Hartranft, which cannot be sustained by facts. The Tribune has enough to do to look after is own affairs, without go ing into a neighboring State to defame a Gen eral whom it knows nothing about and whom It called Hartsuff whenevar he won a brilliant victory at the head of the boldest of soldiers. His Important services to his country when she sorely needed men like John Hartranft should, in themselves, shield him from malignant at. tacks upon his private character and his per. sonal honor, unless the paper that assails him has incontrovertible evidence that its charges cannot be false. Greeley's History of the Re bellion says the Fifty•first New York took Antietam Bridge, but in that statement he did the Fifty-first Pennsylvania no greater injus tice than he has done its gallant leader in the past month. Gov. Wmtxtorn, of Louisiana, called upon the President, the other day, and during his visit voluntarily proposed the foimation of a new Republican State Committee of Louisiana, five members of which should consist of his own adherents, and five of those who have supported Packard, and that Packard should be made chairnmn.of this reconstructed Com mittee. If the President would use his influ ence to bring about this compromise, General Warmoth is said to have winked Wan his own support, and that of hiafollowers in Louisiana, during the Presidentitri campaign. It is also reported that the President refused to listen to Warmouth's proposition, remarking that he could not Interfere in the matter, and that Warmoth left Washington determined to op - pose the reelection of Gen. Grant to the full extent of his ability. If President Grant's po litical enemies are created through his refusal to lend the influence of his office to the "fix ing up" of political affairs in the different States, so much the better' for the President. • President Grant has given ample evidence that be will not do anything for the purpose of ac( curing his renomination. Ile has never even asked for that and if he is the choice of the National Republican Convention, it will be be cause • the people desire the continuance in office of a true, honest, tried and trusted Pres ident, in preference to one of whose capabili ties they know nothing. A RECENT number of the Jacksonville (Florida) Sentinel contains an interesting letter written to the son of the late President Tyler by General George 11. Thomas, shortly before that distinguished officer's death, in which, referring to the proposition, at that thne already mooted in certain quarters, of presenting his name for the Presidential nom ination by the Republican party in 1872 L-after sitting that under no circumstances should lie permit his name to be used at that "or any subsequent date," he suggested that it was a great deal too early to begin to look up another Republican candidate, and said of the Presi dent: "Grant is still young: has not, as yet, com• milted any serious mistake, and if he contin ues steadfast to the principles enunciated in his Inaugural, will be entitled to the second term, or at least to the nomination, as an ex pression of the approbation of the party for his past services." This frank and hearty tribute to the charac• ter aid qualities of his former chief effectually disposes of the story, then and since current among the opposition, Mat Gaant and Thom as were estranged: lioth of these great sol diers throughout the war showed themselves remarkably free from that jealousy which is the curse of little minds, and it Is pleasant to know that the Bayard of the Union army went down to his grave confident in the integrity of the administration and in the firm belief that, in peace as ithAvar, his old comrade In arms had no other are than the prosPerity and advancement of the nation. • The manufacturing establishments at Hall. fax, N. B. hare been compelled to suspend worts, oaq;ig to the scarcity of coal. C. D. BRICIEIAM, Esq., of the Pittsburgh Commercial, having declined to accept the appointment of Auditor General, the Senate has passed the House resolution continuing rtzm leneral liartranft In the office until his sec. emu la elected and qualified. Orin public men In Washington might re fresh themselves by reading a Milepost history. As we huts) already shown, Washington had to endure unspeakable assaults from men In side his political family. ' Presidents Jefferson, Madison, and• Monroe had their own internal and domestic difficulties to overcome. John Quincy Adams started in a family war and ended in one. Old Hickory fought through eight years of unparalleled political, personal, social, domestic, and financial detraction, and yet, strange to say, after a conflict with the leaders of his own party, the members of his Cabinet every one cutting at each other, and at last nearly getting into war with foreign na tions, ho was re elected by the largest of known majorities, and died in the midst of universal gratitude and love. We find his statues, busts, ana pictures in many of the old Whig houses, especially since the rebellion, during which the motto of "The Union—it must and shall be preserved" was an axiom. Grant is simply running the same gauntlet and passing through the same purgatory.--The Press. OP all the sheets that oppose the renomina tion of President Grant the Cincinnati Com mercial Is the lowest, vilest and most dishon est. Its lies surpass even those of the En. quirer. It is Free Trade, too, as such an In• famous sheet should be. If we were to join the copperhead party we should take the En• quirer,.which had the manliness to face the odium that attached to its position during the war, when the Commercial was too cowardly to be a copperhead emissary. Its assaults upon Secretary Robeson are only equalled by those of the New York Sun and are in doer. Imitation of that unprincipled black-mailer. Since Dana has declined totes tify before the Investigating Comniittre, it would be interesting to have Dalstead it Co. brought from Cincinnati to tell what they know about the Secretary of the Navy. Will they come, or will they, like Dana, rierdini;? We remember when the Commercial pre tended to place little confidence in the truth• fulness of copperhead charges against the Re publican party, but now, because the editor of an opposition Republican paper received a Presidential appointment, while the Com mercial got nothing, that paper believes every charge that is hissed from a copperhead's mouth. •In a recent issue it even goes so far as to publish an article, wi'h conspicuous headings copied from the Reading Engle, an obscure sheet printed in the darkest and notoriously moat Ignorant county of Penn sylvania. NEW HAMPSHIRE ELECTION The result of the New Hampshire election shows the Democrats that the Republican party is not completely shattered to pieces, and we notice that some of the Democratic papers take very different views of political matters now from what they did a short time ago. Then they had n good deal to say about the " great reaction against Grant" which was waiting to find expression and which would make itself felt in the New Hampshire election. ,Now no less an exponent of Democratic opinion than the New York World concedes the renomina tion of Gen. Grant as one of the consequences of the result in New Hampshire. The World is probably right in supposing that Gen. Grant will be renominated at Philadelphia In June, tit It iscertainly not right in attributing that renominatic.n as one of the consequences of the voting in New Hampshire. Had New Hamp sbtregone Democratic it would have been in no sense a condemnation of President Grant's ad ministration, and it would not in any way have shaken the confidence of the people at large in Gen. Grant ns a competent and faithful Presi dent. The New Hampshire Republicans lost the election last year by Mal differences and inactivity ; they carried it this year by pUlling together and getting out their whole strength. Had Gen. Grant been as unpopular with his party as the Democrats have endeavored to make out this might not have been done, but the truth is that those who have endeavored to persuade themselves that Gen. Grant has no standing wills the rank and file of the Repub lican party are most grievously mistaken. That is just where his strength lies, and it is because he Is strong with the rank and file that he will be renominated and reelected. Gen Grant is the people's man, and the people rule In this coun• try. The result of the New Hampshire election is one of the Indications of time strength of the Presmdent with his party, and It Is an indica tion which carries discouragement to anti- Grant men throughout the country. POOR SUM N ER. It has been a peculiar characteristic of those men who have left the Republican party In the past few years that they charge the respond bility upon some one else. This is cowardly and unworthy of men like Greeley, Sumner, Trumbull &• Co. Senator Sumner is the last to make such a charge. Ile has been interviewed, and the result of this interview shows that he will bid good-bye to the Republican party. Ile will do it in such a way, however, that he can persuade himself that we who are left behind are not Republicans and that the party to which he attaches himself is the Republican party. Like Greeley he speaks of the Re. publican Convention as the Philadelphia Con ventton, having already persuaded himself that the Convention to be held in Cincinnati is a Republican Convention. After he pro. sides over the deliberations of the. left wing of the Democracy he can easily satisfy his own conscience with the belief that it is the Repub. lican Convention and that the Philadelphia Convention is made up of secessionists from the old piny. In truth he has already avowed to Senator Wilson that if the Presi dent persisted in being a candidate and sue- ceeded in gaining the nomination, he (Grant) would simply and emphatically bo the Ens union candidate, so far as party Is concerned. Charles Sumner should be under the care of the' best physicians. Evidently the brain which once commanded the admiration of men of all parties, is weakening in its declining years, possibly made prematurely weak by the cowardly blows of a slaveholders' underling. We remember how Seward was made imbe cile by the same power that deprived us of our Lincoln, and how the Republicans, in Ills diseased mind, seceded from the old organi zation and left him and Johnson and Randall and a few more to carry the standard of Re publicanism ne they "swung around the circle." And now Sumner is afflicted with the same malady, and the noble, scholarly mind which, in its palmy days, electrified time nu- Con, is dead forever more. The thought of it is a sad one, but if we did believe this to be so we should be Mica with indignation at the thought of Sumner, or any other man, In his right senses, setting himself up with his few fellow disorganizers and claiming to be the Republican party. If he is still 9f soma mind ho will find, after his participation in the do liberations of the Cincinnati Convention, that his star of greatness Is set forever. llb will discover, perhaps when too late, that the Re. publican party is too firmly joined togetherth be separated and destroyed merely to gratify the spite and hatred of a few men who could not maintain amicable relatiohs with the Pres 'Went. They have the acknoWledged right to favor whom they please for President, but when they resolved to bolt the nomination be fore it was made, they forever forfeited the confidenc, of the Republican party and their attempt to intinaidato the party into throwing Grant overboard is a most unheard of piece of atenMption and villainy. - TIIFAFRIGH.REGintR, ALLETOWN. WEDNESDAY, MARCH 2.7 1872. . No GOOD can be accomplished by removing the State Capitol to Philadelphia.. "In these days of quick transit," It will take the mem hers from the west and northwest from four to five hours longer to get to the Legislative halls. This may not seem long to editors who do not have to travel it, but,it will be a serious objec tion to those members who go home every week. There can be no justice in removing the capitol to the „extreme eastern section of the State. If the suggestion was to make it more central,the project would he more worthy of consideration. Tho champions of the re moval admit that it will not benefit Philadel phia. Then Jelly remove it ? It will do harm to Harrisburg and cannot be of any advantage to the majority of the members of the Legisla ture. In the heart of a largo city like Phila. deiphia it will be more subject to corruption, and on the other hand, as the State Govern ment has made Harrisburg what it is, has drawn people there who would otherwise not be there, we think it would be an example of had faith to take the government offices away at this late day.' Harrisburg Is always dull when the Legislature is not In RCBFIIOI3 and what would it be if the State offices were also taken away. Anybody who knows the place will not pretend that its present size and im portance would have been reached had It not been the capital of the State, and though we have no particular affection for the city we op pose the removal from feelings of justice to her property holders, and business men, not to say anything of the unnecessary expense that would be entailed by the removal. SEVEN PER CENT. The Legislature will soon adjourn and with out changing the law regulating the rate of in. tercet. We deplore this, because w o believe the present law is doing Pennsylvanhi great injustice. There may be locations where six per cent. interest does not work against the prosperity of the people, but if there are such they comprise a very insignificant portion of the commonwealth. The argument against the increase to seven per cent. is that it will increase the buidens of farmers who have mortgages on their properly. That sounds plausible and in some instances, we believe, would be true ; but how many young farmers, just starting out in life, can borrow money at six per cent. without paying a bonus upon it, which distributed through s period of four or five years, would make the average interest about seven per cent. ? So that the law, in fact, is broken every day, and it must be broken to retain money here which would otherwise seek investment iu States that pay a higher rate of interest. The Leg islature of New Jersey recognizes the disad• vantage the people of that State would labor under were their laws to put the rate of inter. st lower than in those localities outside of their jurisdictirn which to a measure regulate or govern, by their intercourse, the business policy of her people, and, therefore, in those localities affected by the seven per cent. inter est of New Vork the legal rate is seven per cent and in those counties governed by Phil adelphilithe rate is only six per cent. The result is that northern New Jersey increase s wonderfully in population, manufactures and wealth, while the southern section will never be anything else than an agricultural country which, fortunately, requires less money than the interests of the northern section. For..ign capital oftentimes seeks investments in mort gages on real estate, where the loan will be permanent. It does not desire a bonus, but refers a steady rate of interest to run througli ten, twenty, or even a hundred years without change. A large number of Investments of this kind are made In America, but we cannot expect the money to come to Pennsylvania at six per cent., when it can be just as well se cored in New York at seven per cent. An agricultural community can always be amply supplied from its local money centres, but in a district like Lehigh county where the people are thoroughly alive to the great opportunities open for :meet ss ful manufacturing enterprises, we feel the want of outside cap'tal and there. fore are more particularly anxious-for the le. galization of a higher rate of interest. There may be a few, however, even here, who would take a shortsighted view of the matter at firs' —we refer to those who are now paying but six per cent. on old mortgages—but a short experience would show them that the increas ed prosperity of the community the additi t a: amount of money in circulation, the advance ment in value of their real estate, etc., would he a full compensation for the adlitional one per cent. they would pay. Evans investigating Committee. This Committee held a session at Harris. burg on Wednesday evening. Messrs. Muck ey, Graeff, Moore, Hartrantt and the corres• pondent of the Sun and others were exam ined before the Committee. They all deny the charges made by the correspondent of the 'gin, and the corespondent of the Sun testified that lie received the information snd accounts from Dr. Paine, one of Evans , securities. General Hartranft admits that lie veculated In stocks, but it watton his own as count, and he did not use the money from the State. He says he borrowed $7OOO. from from Evans and gave him a due bill, and paid it back with interest, but that Evans still holds the due bill. We append the testimony of General Ilart ran ft: John E.llartranfl, Auditor General, sworn. Knew nothing of the circumstances attending the passage of the resolution laws of 1867; first saw It in the pamphlet laws of that year; never received nor expected to receive any profits from the collections under that resolution, and had no direct or indirect interest in the claims; had read the accusation In the Sun ,against himself and others; so tar as they re. waded himself 'hey were taleclin March, 1870, Evans bad insisted that witness should give Wm voucher's which were In the Auditor Gen eral's office; he had at first refused to give them up, believing that they did not come under the resolution; finally, Evans bad pro nested the following letter from Governor Geary: EXECUTIVE CLIAMBEE, Ihnrusßuho. Mhrch 20, 1870. To the Son. John F. Hartranf(, Auditor Gen Stu: Under the act of Congress of July 27 1861, authorizing the Governors of the States to present claims for expenses. incurred In raising volunteers during the late rebellion, I respectfully request that you will allow the hearer , George O. Evans, appointed by me special agent of the State, under the joint re solution of the Legislature, March 22. 1867, to have duplicate vouchers of war expendi• tures by the Stat., with the view of collect ing from the Ended States, if possible, a class of claims, which under the ruling of the ac• counting officers of the General Government have been technically termed disallowed pay ment therefore refused By supplying deficient testimony with prop. cr explanations and the use ,of all available precedents, Mr. Evans is confident of obtain ing the allowance of a considerable amount equally duo by the United States to Pennayl• vaula. Mr. Evans represents to me that pending legislation in Congress may speedily disallow totever every claim of tido kind, and urges that prompt action b, taken in the mat ter. For this purpose I will gladly render any assistance In my power. Very respectfully, JOHN W. GEARY. After this letter the witness had surrendered the vouchers first making an agreement that Evans ehould•receive only such reasonable commission as witness should award. Wit. nese further testified that he never got $30,000 as charged by the Sun.—Neither did he ever have the bo.ks and accounts of Evans, nor any papers belonging to him except his effi• Mal report. Witness had kept a private no. eount with Yerkes; hail bought and sold stocks on' margin, and had paid the broker the same interest and commissions as paid by others. These transactions were in no possi ble way connected with the public funds and were not made through their tur; no agree ment had been made through Mr. Mackey or otherwise, by which the State money was to be used for stock purposes, nor had witnerst, by virtue of his position, ever attempted to control or use such funds; In reference to charges about Oil Creek and Allegheny etock, an to hits having speculated In the same, he bad simply bought and sold one hundred shares six months before the transaction be. tween the State and the Company: this Iran faction was a claim of a hundred thousand dollars made out by J. At Forster, corpora. tion clerk in the Auditor General's office against the company. It was based on a. transaction of the tax The company and the State submitted •the matter to the Attorney General, and lied°. cided against the claim as not based on correct views of the law, and had never made any ar. rangement with Yerkes to use the pnblic funds for stock purposes, and the only profit he made was by running his own risks. The reason why ho had given Evans the vouchers was because Evans had shown him the act of Congress limiting the time for the payment of claims. sod the letter of the Governor in March, 1871. Evans had offered to loan wit ness some money, and had subsequently tie accepted a loan for $7OOO, and given his due bill. In August, 1871, he bad paid Evans, with Interest to date, and taken a rr octet, al though Evans retained the due bill. Witness concluded by producing copies of all corres pondence between himself and the President of Farmer, and Meblinnics' Bank in reference to the purchase of State loans in 1870, show ing his transaction to have been perfectly leg itimate. PENNSYLVANIA Destructive Fire—The Arch Street Opera Itounit Burned. PHILADELPHIA, March 21. Yesterday morning, about half-past six o'clock, the Arch Street Opera Home (Simmonic& Slocum), on the north side of Arch street, above Tenth, was discovered to he on fire. The flames ap pear to halm commenced in the basement, ,at the rear portion, and are supposed to have originated from the heater. Wm. Bleever,an employe or the establishment, entered the building through the rear do.or, and while en gaged in washing himself detec'ed the odor of am :ke. He called the attention of the watchman to the fact, and the two men began an examination. When they discovered where the fire was, it had gained considera ble headway. Efforts were made to extin guish it, but they were of no avail, and about fitteen minutes before seven o'clock an al rm was given, and the Piro Department soon ar rived on the ground. Bleever got very badly singed by a sudden guSh of flame when he first mgan to 100 K for the tire. The Arch Street Opera House occupied the site of two dwellings, Nos. 1003 an 1005 Arch street, formerly owned by a Mr. Powell. The lot is 50 feet front by 175 in depth, extending to Academy street. The buildings were al tered in 1870, and on the 29th of August 'of that year the new Opera House was opened under the manageMent of Simintfos E Sine= with minstrel entertainments. The front of the building was of brick, plastered in itnita tine of white marble. The atructure was two stories in height, and was surmounted with an ornamented cornice. The interior was fitted up in an elegant manner. The ceiling and walls were frescoed in handsome style, and the seats for the audience were of an improved style. The stage was 30 feet in depth, and 27 feet 6 inches between the . prosceniums, with a highly ornamented front. There was also a full supply of scenery, some of which was very costly, especially that used in the pantomime '• Mazulme," which Tins been running for up wards of two weeks. Tile cost of the build• log was $47,000. As stated above, the fire began in the base ment in the rear of the building. It spread through that portion of tile house, destroying id] of the cow ents, and then communicated to the front. The entire establishment, except the lower part of tile front bulldin was burnt out. The wardrobe belonging th the members of the troupe, •tad valued at $3,000, was saved by the watchman and Mr. Bleever. The building wits owned by Bolton A Win penny and Thomas R. Gamed, Messrs. Sim moos A Slocum also having an interest in it.: The total loss is estimated at $50,000. Tile Insurance amounts to $25,000. Wm. Simpson, driver of Engine No. 3, was badly Injured by fall from the root. The property adjoining the Opera IPmae. and the stores on either side of the entrance, were considerably damaged by fire and water LATE NEWS ITEMS. The Baltimore Gazette, the lending Demo cratic newspaper of Maryland, has been sold to Wm. H. Welsh, late proprietor of The Philadelphia Age, and Beery Taylor and Wm. H. Carpenter of Baltimore, W. W. Glenn redring The change will be an• flounced by the Gazette to (lay. The boih.r of a locomotive on the Michigan Central track, drawing a heavy train, explod• ed on Saturday. Only the engineer was in. jured. By the falling of a high wall on the site Lill's brewery, iu the north Division, Chicago, tin Saturday, seven men were injured, one of them fatally. Dr, W. A. Hudson was convicted, at Ft. Louis, on Saturday, of, manslaughter in the second decree, for procuring an abortion on Ann E. Magill. about a year two, and was sentenced to three years' imprisonment. The Coroner's Jury in the steam holler ex plosion case at Dubuque, lowa, found that the explosion was caused by the safety-valve being overweighed, to prevent its warning of excess of steam to the encineer. The trains nn the Bolleville and Southern Illinois Railroad have been stoned lately, and the lives 011ie passengers endangered, by a gang of scoundrels near Pinckneyville. Two men were arrested in the act, and, while he. ing searched by the City Marshal, one of them drew a knife and stabbed him, inflicting a wound 13 inches long whereupon the Marshall Glint the desperado dead. The beat•race in London on Saturday was won by the Cambridge crew. Queen Victoria is in France. Parliament has adjourned for E ster holidays. Two Paris jo innli'ts thive fought a du The (nudism Emhassadors in Paris protest against the new commercial policy of France. Spain threatens to make reprisals. The NY inter has been very severe . in China and Japan. BUSINESS NOTICES YeUs and Neighs.—lf horses could matte them selves understood in homan language, they would signl fy by an uniVereal ''Yea" their assent t• the statemer that the 31r•raiu LINIMENT IM Iho best remedy extant fa all thesis extern 'I ailment, and by a most empititi. •'Neigh"' show their di•pleature at every atiempt to an any other prep ration In no stead. Ever since its intro motion at St. Loots, at the close of the Mexican War 18.191 It has proved a signal blessing to horse and man caring, with absolute certainty and wonderful dispatch, 'such stralue disesises an spayin. ringbolt°, ppll scratches, hoofelo, and relieving and tinnily remov lug the palatal affections whieh attach, the munch,. sinews and external gland. of human beings. It its a fan beyond contradiction that fur all inittrics or complaints o in in or quadrup ds to which no external remedy in .ppn cabin. the Mb•seatu LINIIMT In preforablo, to over oth or. What Dveppida Hay End In.—lndigestion In not dangerous, any the faculty. Perhaps not le itself, while It remain. m to indigestion; but look at the connequences to which it may lead, and often does lead when it becomes a chronic dinetwe. A quirk of tlre'in n mall thing. A pressure of tho foot will put it out; a breath wit extinguish it. Yet it may fire a powder tun), or kindle a flame that will consume n city. In like manner ledlgen tion ny produce g.tritln, cancer of the stomach, con ...len of the bowels, apoplexy, liver disc.', and hinny other dangerous maladies. In it not wine, then, to cheek It in the germ? Nothing Is more clearly and indisPuialtlY established than that 11..stetter'n htonmeh Hillard will cradle ,te dyspepsia in all tin stages Tito true policy, however, is to extlngninh It in the trot stages with Ole wholesome, powerful, and Infallible whir and altelative. It In easier to quench a spark than a d Hon, and it Is easie r to Cane dy.i.pgla when it in . tirst developed, than when it has made headway by neglect, uud become complicat d wi.ll ether ailments. There In not the nhadow of a doubt that the hitless are en directly antagonistic to clyspopsla as water is to tire. There aro tbounam. of CHI!a ou record provlog n root. The remedy I auto nun agree blo. All the liquors of commetTo proneribedas stimulants ;raveßit..bohlud. Hut tee •111.11, Do taken out of the spirituous baste at trim great remedy by vegetable Intuit cattou,.aud, moreover, the nilniulaut than medicated In of exceptional purity. Of all tonics taken un safeguards Of roil...diet. for fever Ind ague, bilious I,lllllolltll, and ether epidemic., it In the only one that eau unifotnaly be depended on. Dr. rt. D. Longaker offers his service to the afflicted. more especially to those nn daring from Chronic Diseases. lie will be glad to see and talk with thorn. It Is bin practice to plainly declare a dinette° incurable NI., bellocen it to be no. In thentl canes Which he turriert ken he guarantees to do all Clint can be done by unwe.ricd at. Mullen and the application of experienced skill, gar ed by ninny yearn of practice In treating dirreano in its sati n. and nhrst tuuliguaut form. That iris skill, Iran rot been exerted in gain. numerous certilicaten. that may be' peen at bin °lnce, will testify. A few cameo are !selected for publication, which are known to cit rein of this county. No feeling of egotirirn prompts their publicalloa, brit tinny are published rather an an e•idence that 1111 illy who have deemed thamsel sec hopelessly afflicted have by • proper applicatien of the the of medics! science. been restored tu health and the enjoyment of all its bien nium. M ul e i l i car e e . s. B ynb , I , ll l e e r a r e ft w a e n . en i c o . f t ! ... .. c 4 0 , ;. of the Facer. J. J. Johanna, Allentown. Skin Divease. Millen U. Hawarnan, Hanover. Chroble Hoary Umbr Allentown. Deena., Mn. 0. Yeager, Cattimituyna. Tull:Mt/lathe Iliad Nathan Eberhard, Unthlabetn. Cancer. Mee. Dech, Trenlertown. Cancer. Wm. Jameson, Bethlehem. P010....try Catarrh. James Mean. Bethlehem. Chronic Rheumatism. Mrs. J Barrier, Salisbury. Scrofula. E. A. Harlacher. Phliadelphia. (Nucor Tumor, str a . W. S. )(Mulch, Salisbury. Fem. and " 87071timp.o, Lanark. Tomer& of the Mead Abraham . Kstler. Stew Tripoli. Tumor of . the Neck. Mn.. B. B Serfasa,_Slatiegtoq. Fem. Com. Mrs. K. Weindont, Friedenseilln. Cneceeof the Derail. Catherine Amoy. Hearer ilia Cancer aide of the Face. John Leman. Ellegfrled'e Bridge. Polypi, of the Note. Mrs. Foldout:tau. Allentown. Cancer of tho Breast. • Thotias Bum llokoodanqua. Tumor. Mn.r D. Krebs, Alshanoy fly Cancer of the lface. • P. J. Shoemaker. Se•pstown. Tumor. Catharine Hitreman, Weatherly., Caneerof the Nose. The above persons may all be referred to, or certificates maybe seen at Dr. Longaker's °Mee, Shah street, be. tweet, Hamilton and Wallis., Allentown. Pa. ENE MARKETS. Putitanruntra, March 23.—De Haven & Qrci., &otters, N 0.40 South Third Street, -give the tollowing quotatona up to 8 o'clock to-day Buylna'. Selling. New 13. S. s'e of 1881 F)U% 109% . U. B. 6'a of 'Bl .115% 115% ‘,. -62, not. called ...... ......111% 1115.1 44 62, let call llO% ..6 62, 2d Ca 11........ ...... ...111% 44 62, 3d Ca 11... 112% 04 14136 um cr 65 112% 112% k 65, new 111”.‘ 111 •44. 67 ........ ................ .112% 119% CI 69 112 1 ,‘ 112!. s's 11-40 a 107!.; 108 1) year 6 per cent. Currency 1147,; 115% Gold 100 3 ' 110 Silver . Union Pacillclst. M. bonds Central Pacific It. It Union Pacific L. Grant 8... Allentown Produce Market Corrected Daily by Wetturnetmer, Fettogard & CO When?. Flour, per IRA $7 fn Belli. Wheat, per Puehel I il) paying no • Corn 70 Onte . ..... .. 50 .... FIA/111,41 ......... I --- . NO Timothy Reed, peQuehel 6 Clover Seed, 4 (XI ' t. " Wheat Plonr,.per,eviz 400 PaYleg live. " • i 76 Corn Meal, " 44. " Rutter, per Pound 30 psZlnir Lard, • 10 Tallow " 8 Ram,'' 15 Eggs, per dozen 25 Pongees, Per bust.l, new :45 Dried Apples, per banhol 200 " Dried Peaches '' 6 On EDUCATIONAL The Keystone State Normal School Inauguration of the New Principal. KUTZTOWN, March 16. The Keystone State Normal School Is situated In Kutztown, Barks county, and never since its doors were thrown open to the public, has so large a crowd assembled at one time within Its walls as on Thursday:afternoon, the 14th of March, to wit ness the Inauguration of the new principal, Prof. A. R. Rome. The exercises opened at about one o'clock,when the Trexlertown Orchestra played a march, during Which the faculty, students and visitors entered, the former and latter occupying seats upon the platform, while the students occupied the body of the chapel. Rev. B. E. Kramlieh, President of the Board of Trustees, presided, and Rev. Mr. Patterson, of Pottsville, opened with prayer. The choir then performed "Bark, the Bong of Jubilee," after which Rev. Mr. Eranlich said : LA DIES AND GENTLEMEN: As president of the Board of Trustees, I bare a very pleasant duty to perform on this occasion— to formally Induct Into into ()Mee the Principal elect of the Keystone State Normal School. We present him to you as • the scholar and the man ; one who combines, In a remarkable degree, the quiet dignity of the elris clan Minister, the accomplishments of the scholar and the tio lesOimportant qualifications of an ad f tninistrative n ccr. Rev. Pulpy. OHNE : The Board of Trustees, has, alter mat re and careful deliberation cane] you from spheres of extensive usefulness, where you labored with marked success,tn a po sition no less arduous and responsible, and yet, at the Mine time of greater Importance to the interest of edu cation at large. With your faithful and devoted coiaborcrs, you are to unite your elf 'rt.; In gaol I lying young ladies and gentlemen, for the active duties of file, to provide able and efficient teachers for tile school room. The Keystone has already made Its mark for good. Site has sent forth 60111 V excellent teach ers. She has aroused the community from her slumbers ; she has aided In raising the standard of education among our people; she has awak ened a spirit of liberality among us ; she has ad vanced the cause of education and religion. We would not, however, Attempt to d I e u Ise the fact that you enter upon the duties of your station under peculiar, trying circumstances. The noble Keystone has drifted northward about 69 m I Iva out of the track of all vessels, surrounded on all sides with terrille storms and threatening icebergs —the crew demoralized—the passengers despond ing. But the great commander of the educational ship of state, cried out "Stand by her ! Stand by her! She dare not go down." Wu did stand by her and are titeadily drifting back.into the open sea again. The dark clouds are disappearing; the crew Is hopeful and the passengers on board are chtiorful. The commaud now falls ou your shoulders. As the lust . act, Bir, I Imre to perform on this occaslon, I present to you, In the name of the au thorities of the Trustees of the' Keystone State Normal School, these keys of the Institution, as ymb.ila of your authority. Take them, and on assuming the duties of your °Mee, remember also your re=ponhibillties, and meet them firmly, con sciously and in the tear of God. Prof. Horne received the keys from Rev, Mr. K ramlleh, and acknowledged that a great respon sibility had been placed upon him by the Board, nod promised, 10 God's help, to do all he could for the Institution. • Mr. J. W. Gitnker then welcomed the new Prin cipal, In behalf of the students, in a neat speech. Prof. N. C. Schaeffer welcomed the new Princi pal In the name of the Faculty. Ills speech was pithy and to the point, and convinced his hearers that he Is a gentleman of ability and an orator. Rev. A. It. Borne , the newly elected Principal thou arose laid made a long, able and instructive • address, giving an idea of the principles upon which he intends to conduct the school. The ad dress Is too lengthy for publication in full In these columns and we fear a condensation of his remarks would fall to do him Justice. Prof. Wickersham, State Superintendent of Schools, was Introduced and madea few remarks. Ile congratulated the Board on their choice. If the people of Kutztown wished to agitate gIICS LIMIS, and he waa so informed in coming up In the cars, let them quarrel about the streets, sidewalks and public buildings,but keep hands oil the Key• stone Normal School. Ile spoke lu glowing terms of the German element all over the country, and complimented them for their energy and enter prise.. Ile paid a high compliment to Prof. Schaef fer for his energy in keeping up and conducting the school during the past winter, and to Prof Horne, lie congratulated the Board and the stu. dents upon securing so good an executive officer. Rev. S. K. Brobst, of Allen tows, delivered a line address in the German language ; followed by Prof. L. B. Brunner, County Superintendent. Prof. Patterson, of Pottsville, than addressed the audience In a pithy and pleasant speech. Ile eon. gratulated the Board and community that they had a Horne at the head now and hoped that It was sufficient to bear down all opposition to the school. Ile was followed by Prof. Stewart of the Reading High School. Rev. S. KI Brobst pro nounced the benediction and the as . semblage ad journed, all highly pleased with the afternoon's eutertaintnent. The music of the Trexlertown Orchestra, Under the leadership of Prof. F. 11. Kuder,aa well as the singing of the school choir and organ solo of Mr. Scheatfer, , was very excellent. The Keystone Normal School District may well feel proud, and the students congratulate them selves upon having secured so excellent a Princi pal as Rev. A. It. Horne. WAGNER has an extended reputation for the flee quality of the tobacco he puts in his cigars If you once buy a cigar there that you like you can always go back again with the assurance that he keeps the saute brands year In and year out, and always up to a regular standard. That Is the rea son Wagner is so successful In drawing the best Judges of cigars to his establishment. MR% GULDIN has received another .lot of new goods which are very much admired by the lairs. Those who are not posted upon the latest styles can see everything that Is.pretty by paying a visit to this establi-hmen: Dratito. FRANTZ.—At. White Hull, on the 21st, Mrs. Joseph Frantz, eget! sixty—lour yearn. killOAD.—Near 11/htte Itoll,on the 241,11, !Attlee Rhona. BENNER.—In this city, March 24th, Allan, son of Asher and Eveline Benner, aged 5 years, 4 months and 16 days. GAUL.—In this city, on the 19th Inst., Charles Saul, aged 54 years, 4 months and 5 days. KUNTZ.—At Walnutport, Feb. 10th, Lovinla, wife of David Kuntz, aged 23 y tars, 5 months and 2 days. SMITH.—In 811,411611, Feb. 13th, Meta Aoulila, child of Elias Smith, aged 1 mouth and 22 days. LAURY.—At filegfrieds Bridge, Feb. 16th,ltab ert David, son of Lewis and Elizabeth Laury, aged 9 years. n months and 3 days. GROSS.—At Petersville, Feb: 24th, Mary. Ann, daughter of Josiah and Catharine Gross, aged 1 year. 9 months and 7 days. 11ILBERG.—Near Blegfrleils Whin., Ida Alice, only child of John and Amanda E. llnberg, aged 1 year 1 month and 10 days. BPE:NOLER.—In East Allen, March Ist, Alice Catharine. child of Absalom and Catharine A. Spengler, aged 1 year, months mil 13 days. YOUNG.--In Allen,. March sth, Viola Sarah, daughterof William Henry and Sarah Ann Young, aQ ,1 1 year, 11 months and 8 days. FLY.—Near Kleckneravllle, March 6th, Laura A.olauebter of Samuel and Mary Fly, aged 5 years, 9 months and 11 days. WOLF.—At ,Krolderevllle, March 12th, Laura Alresta ' child of James and Mary Wolf, aged 1 year 10monthe and 18 days. RICE.—In Catusuuqua, March 12th, J.llllOl Blchardoon of Bunco and the late Conrad Rice, aged 11 Aare, 7 months and 17 days. Burial at Peterevllle Church. Speciat Notiros TO CONIAIMPTIVES.—Tfto advertisqd ‘r , -Y having been restored to health in a few weeks, bra •ery simple remedy, after having gottforoil several years with a severe lung affection, and that dread disease,_Con anniption,losnalonsto tnnko k nown to his fellow aufferers tho means of cure. To all whodonire it; ho Will Send a copy of the proscription nod (froo of charge), with tho direc tions for proparing And using the same, which they will npd a sure core for Consumption, &stilton, Bronchitis, &c. Tho only obinct.if the advertiser in sending the PrescrlO tion In to benefit the afflicted,nod spread Information which ho ves to be Invaluable; and ho hopes every eufferer will try his remedy, an It rill cost thorn nothing and may provo n blessing. Parties wishing the prescription will please Address, Rev. EDWAIID A. WILSON; Williamsburg Kings Co. N. Y. 11::?. ERRORS OF YOUTII.—A gentleman who nuffered for yearn from Nervous Prom turn Decay nod all the effects of yoothful indiscretion, will, for 1)10 cake of noffering humanity, rend free to nil who 111011 It, the recipe and direction for making the nun Ple remedy by which hr wits cured. Mu &roll , wishing I. Profit by thoodoortkor'o exporlonro con do by ad dressing loperfectcoundoß JOHN 00 DEN. No. co 49.Codorkit. Nev. York. 10714 10 9116 93 101 101 N . 64",1 85 GETTING MARRIED.-ESSAYS FOR Lt , ..Y Yining Men. on grgat SOCIAL EVILS and ABUSES which interfere wllh MARRlAtiE—with turn wenn. , at relief for the Erring and Ifororitionto ill.dol.rd nod dolill lintod. Aildre.ii , 110 W ARD AbSOCIATION. No. booth Ninth 'Argot. Philadelphln. Pa. gr .,.. . 7 7-7.`MANfI nll' Oopt—o 1.0 6 T, How RESTOMID. Just published. a 1110 V edition or Itlt. l iil,C ElI WELL'S CEI,EHHA I'ED ESSAY on the railicell curs 0 cat ttill weak menses, lha elrectn of Errors and Mows I early life. The celebrated author In thin admirable e•- say, clearly tientonntrates front a thirty ye rn' macro...4ld practice, that the elan tans; conmegnencen of such errors nod sbn.ett may be radically cured wilimut the dihtll,llll4 USO of internal medicine or tire applic ,tutu or the knife • Pointing out a mode or cure at once certain, and etE•cuml, by 1,11,11,1 of tvnich every mutterer, no matte what btu COlOllO , Ol nil, be, may cunt himself cheaply, privately end ra , !frally Ay rills bo In the hand.. or every youth and every totsu to the Lind. Sent. under sent. In phi In envelope, to any nibiresn, prodpeticl, on receipt of nix comb., or two pont POOlllll, Aire, Pr. (MI verivell'n ••Marriase Guido,' price 2 colds. Address the Publishetn, • • • • 1.11P 7. ..1. C. KT.177.1i17 127 Bowery., \c .v York, Pnxl-011ie• Box 4,75 i; inn24 . 71-1y iv 11", --, - -, PILES OR TIEMORRIMIDS! INTER EXTERNAL, BLIND. It LEEDINO AND ITCH T NO. resf.arla and PernoinPatia CURED by AB. NO BB Ti?) (No 1), t , ton from 111141111,..) without Draw,. Carat tea or Instroontnts, by WM. A. MCUANOLASS, M. D., - )NO. 2001 ARCH STREET, PIIILADA., Who can r.der yon to our fOOO Cdloll cored. We &m ire to sa y corn otllicted there In rondtlyaly uo deception la of iloo.o DIRFAOtpI. it moan. ant how tong or bow never , ly }on hove been afflicted. we con care you. Wo oho cur: Ft,? FlA•uro Prolutolun, Strlcturwt and 17Iceratiod of dm lower bwrol. Chaco tronted tawss die• panes no n apecia y fur (meaty years. f feb2l.l3mw Kg-. MYSTIC WATER FROM DAVID'S WELL. The great DI RETIC, TONIC arid ALTERATIVE rem edy of the AUK, holds In iodation Atte Pre,loasillK of Iron and other val nable con:Pounds. anal Is tieing proved lay the unerring too of repeated trials. NS 1100 of Ilan best 111,11111P.14 for Kidney 1,(solmot. Pyxpepritt, Nervous Mr9r ColllPl , lintM. Uftlerrrlarri AfreCUMIR. C:011- ortmption, In Its early ntsges 111 , 10,1 ex. lli.l it" 11 1 , ( ,, - ord.rs, and General It purities end ouriclivn the Woo I, Increase , . tho appetite, promoter dlgentlon, stimulates the SAcretlonn 4111 the nervous spi t... II Is highly rreoriamentlefl by l'hyp. 11711111 A. anal the testimonials ur hn v nluls 1 . 1 VI, I Ito secret power, It In bild nt the low price of +3.00 per hos( Of ono dozen quart ottles, delivered at Uristol, I'a., to be expressed to stay point, Rtea — The HEALINO INSTITUTE at DAVI D'S WELL in designed to accommodate patients doting all 10,1.011.1 of the year who profer drinking tho MYSTIC WATER from tho 'WELL. D. S. CADWALLADER, UM Race St, Phllada. • 18.tim C TilE CA USI , , AND, eI:RE OF CONSUM Tit, —The primary cans., of Connunditton In deniediiiiiiiot of the illize•tiyo °mann. Thin derangetnem produce. deficient notrition nod assintilytiou. Ily itx•ii litidm I mean th .1 pro ees by trhich the nutriment of tho food is converted Into blood. toil Monet, 1010 the 'minds of the body . liernonx dieestion initmired. hnv Sig_ thy slinitiext predisposition to pilltnonary iloomse, or if they, tali. cull, wit bo very Ilimle to hone Consumption of tile Minim in 1101110 111.1. 1001110•. arid I hold 110.1 t trill be to en ally 0,1,40 of Coostimption wahunt first reidoring 41 00041 dige.u,n 11011 healthy mini:mintiest. The Vrry lirxt thine to ho demo in to elem... the etollinell Anil 11 ,10111 44 1041111 1111 41 1n0040141 111 110110 141111 nil la, 11111011 IS 14011101 g 11111.. oro4l n 444 no I, 1114) . 0011 11411 1„'0...0,0 thew ftmettotei, and Om room 1111 and rest , ro the liver , . a besithy ,eti. For thix the remedy ix Schenck 's 31andlnke Pills. These Pills elo the smniarli omit bowels of all 11111 4114/441 nil twirled slime Mei minxing and 1101411). 111 the Wll,lIo 44y44 10111. They will clear telt 111 e 110 , 11 of all !nerd. , 41 111i0 11,11 111 11 In and there. iinti roes.. It to a new toil 11001111 Y 001 lon, by whlclruntaral 4,101 healthy 11110 10 meor, tell Tlot 44401111( 11, hOrrels,nll4l livor dr than Idea., aby the use of Nelie.ek'd 3littotryke ; 101 l there remains In the stionitell nu exc..... of Reid, 1.110 orgen 10 torpid nod the appetite poor. In the bowoln the la teals Oro weak. mid rei mi e j a e strength end support. It In In 4.01111 41041 Ilse lIIIn lint .. r e medy Seaweed Tonle proves to M. the 11 l vain:doe remedy ever 11l scyvereil. It Ix alk aud 11410 WI I I 110111 I, WO all 001.0.0 of acid, Illaking 1110 stunt- Il nen stvoetttud fr,sh ft will give permanent Moo to thin 1 111114111011 org 11, 11 1141 Crento goutl. lwart 0 upttetite• nod preparti thin syniem forth. ; rrtenii4 el 11..101 thee.- tem, and ult.inatelY maiii• it good healthy. 11ring blood, I Moor flux pr i,l4lry 'reit 1 1114411 I, Wllnt 1,1011 1 110 10 Cll 110 11141,1 .Meet'f Co,,COsll 111 111 lon I• 1 1110 I 11414 11 per•overlng n.O 41f SC 11 , 010150 Pll I 1101 11 le Syriln. 'rho Pulin .1110 Syrup no Iri he+ Or 01 n 1 ,4111, nllOl 11,1,4 the blood, 11G4I 141 readily ab.otbod lido the cif, nlyi /1 lid 1011100 rimmed to ! he r s d 111 tort Theri. It ripen, nil 111 011141 matters, , 101101 ln the torte id Ilbsressen or 11 herrn 104, and then ,uststs Nutur.• tuutcutd if tw. dimussed matter. to tho form tll fret, 4-Xpert , ,,Aloll, 101,01 „Ace It r pens. It Is tlfeti.by the eront hemline . end pitrifyln, properties of selteuek's Colinouie 0)01111. that 1111 ulcers nail cavities ore healed up sound, ittel Joy imti..nt Ix cured. The evientlal thing lo 111 Mine li. curing Conntimption ix lo get 111 11 1411 ml 11 11 Pet 110 110,1 gool 11 11,1401 1011, ,40 11111 110 Inlay \VIII grilse in and uot strong It u1t..... flits diu,ts,lson y Or 1110,0104,41 110110,— 1110 envity eitunat heal, the Matter y moot ripen, Ho lung 110 1141 nye tout ix below par. What is oeresnary to eure 141 0 11.11 V „ r ,• 4 4 goof appetite. a goal nll 1 . 4 11011, Ole 1, 0 4 ~, g r o w ~, don). and get fat ; then Nolan. In !trine& ill 01 01111.. will le. WO , moiler will ripen 11 101 1144 10411011 oil in furze qua ntities. nod the person regale bridal loud stre n gth, i 111, In 111,. Cue loud only plan til cur., Con. x empti.m. mel Ira portion in very byd, If tho ore 1.11 mit rely ilextroyel or eveu if ono 111114 gin, If the, enough vitality left in tow 0,11, to heal tle•re hope. any persons cur...l with oillY one n and Inn:. Ilve and oh, •y life to a good addMg, Tlik In what isch•mrk ••• Will do to car. , tioteinintittott. They rb•Au .111 t And mirougthoo It. up good diiiestlon Anil gin. , Nature lho us.lnt ,use oho to cear the system al all the illeemor that is to the longs. the loran may he. It is important th,it white usu.; echenck'a 3leilichies, care ehon lot lei•exetelsed not to (nit° cold; keep liciloors in rout nut mime ire tther; avoid night air, sad take out• door eXerri•O /1..1110 and Igarl/1 I NI I•h it 1)101 when 1 ro:titnmeral u pausal t„ lo• caroful hi regard to taking cold. White ont, I.•illtilni•s I .10 so tor a special A matt w Who par Tally r,•d trout elfecte of it !hid colt' hir 11101 . .1111,111e 10 It 111. , . one .1101111 Sb Iflll euttrely soma'; am) it Is precisely thiisainii in riigArtl to Consumption. so how tlei lung'' are not perfectly honied. 11, so 111.1r0 imminent thing r of,, full ro tura of the ilis...ire. Ilanan Iso lion pulmonary pathinhi agninut exposing them -el Vell to 1111 llllll‘lsohllfe lhal 611101 genial aunt Plrnsa n,. Connrn,°d C•1114111111oliVe 4. 11111,0 Orel /I nor,, the 14,4 clmogo of atmosphere trill ItithAnie, eetiret of my sarrerts 00111listr In my ability to nub lie lall.imamtion iiiiitead of provoking It. nn 11111,1 , of the (amity do. All 111111111,i Ingo ClllOl.l/. With the ..,rely to the p.tient. booze... to the luting blasts of Wlntor or tilt. ..I.llllllg winds of Spring ..0 Autumn. It should Ito carefully shieltioci from all irr . tating influencer, The ut ost .M 1,1.1,1111 111 cure under almost any eh cainet•inceit Th,• porthin should kept on it ty110111,11141 and nutrltl• Ml.tool all rdut n lnued 111101 110117 hos •010 quAlutity of flesh nuil etrongth. I w myself curd bthis tree lineal of the worst kind of Ilarsunipi ion. and give lle«d to get fat and hearty, tom , many yarn. with one lung noisily Llolle. I have owed Irian-.oohs Nine, lied very many have been cured by this treatment loan I have agver seen. About °ember I expect to bike possession of my en. building, et tip; NoriliWitt corner or 'Sixth and A eh street. wilier I chilli be pledge:l to µlvo advice to all W Omy renolre it. Pail dire tome accompany all toy Reined lee, so that a perien In an pa y rt of the world can be readily mired by a strict obaeryauce of the rata, Pricy or the Pulmonle Syrup and Soatrood Ttmlc, 50 1..1110. or 'I:7 .11 a doze, Mandrake Pulls, 25 ceuta a HOW. For oak, by all rouirlsto awl deniers. • HoLLOW AV & COWDEN, I , LY2 Arch street, Agouti. tem./2714y W Al)lllNtsTitATows NitEricc. AA. NOtiee ill hereby Glyn that Lottent of Atltnlnlstrrt tit, 11111.0 been ttrit..tvd to the undersigned In tho et.txtt If tl,t tt os-, the Ityor 01 101011. Le high roam y. ilwrolont nll Wrsitus who built thotunelvt.. to he ititlt•litt.tl tit nltl.ll..tate, lire reit 11,4.1 to 1111.1.,tt pay le wlthltt I•ix• week. from the dot-hereof, nud stint have uuv I,ttl claltit,tit.tlunt emtit to will pr..ltett thou, well lottotlittleatctl lOr nettletuentov It Ott, p-rill• I that 111,13.0 A SSIGNEF:'S N4lll'ller. When WILL/AM F AO F.V. of tho Itornugh of Cants:ol.ln, Lehigh County, awl CHRIS N. ANNA, hi. tv Ito, by rnjunt try deed of tttn.luntuent Fol.rit try 7111. 1 , 72. cony., tql IA tho nub crib, all 111. oto. re.tl, nod tub: .1, for 111.1 benefit of 1,1. crtolltoro. Nolte° to hereby g 15,,. to nllporoono I. &toted tottd i.artloo 1,11100. pity nt..at to 1110 onitsrrtbor wlthltt oln wool°, null tho.o hat, lug . clnlino bt Frr.om the .111 V, duly authentic/1t...1, tvaltlu tho o tltno. II . 11. 11011. N, A•slunno. CATAAAcur February 27, 1,72, ntar 0 6,V OTICE OF APPLICATION FOR 1Ni:016'1/RATION. The tn.h.r , 14 , .. , 1 hereby g'vntarllc.ll.t they hove made eteeteat on to tho (:,,en of COlOlll4lll I'lo Lehigh Cenute for o Chiller of ettoreerathou for a Slum .1 Live t.teek f, hunt ro C01110•11‘ . under tho nav klyitn not tit nr .• 'Tn.' A 1.1.FN . r0 t PAL LINE • NICK IN SCE CoMPA " Tie ert b etn of teeeteettlon h No beet 11 ed to Prethonet trr end duke+ neffieleut Tells be ..lettrh to the central.) tte nr before the first day of teat term the said charter of lucent...Co , . will he granted on meted for. BENJ. J. li ii SBUCIi EtlltoE Fli Y. DAVI It ti I I.llElt ELIA.; MEW! Z. . MA WPIN li F 11 El :ABACI', 11. C. 11UNSBEIWER. me II rx.A SNSSOI EtN NOTICE , . NOTICE IS HEREBY RIVEN to the Asses/wax of Media 'rent Wards, lioroughs anal Townships to tan ultra ...l Matra lush, that they are Ta otitt the oaks , of tie County Conettassionsrat, on SATUR DAY. Al'llll,Cab. at 10 o'clock. A: 11., for the urponu of receiving the a ner,s. sry 1,011, An instructions p rtalulug to their °ince. Ily ardor of the Comm slam:ern. Aticht: L. 51, ENGLEMAN, Clerk. AYrll ATOIC'S Notice In hereby ulven that letters tetatmenntsry tin' hug been .rtled to lho tiwiersignall In the estate eat 1.1.011tt II 11Y S. cWARTZ tleco.ocal, Into of Lower Macungie tattaltaahip Lehigh County. Dior fore. nil Por e.- who know theinsolvo• t a he Irolialattal to maid ontatto. ars poppy.. I to make payment within six weeks front tho ant., Ii anti snob who h tve any Inuit! claims ainst anoint toasta• will present then, antheaticatea tartotttlenteut within the ,all tan specattna onto . . . . . ittAtE , on nuTz. Adlnfulniretrix BTEril EN BuTz. 11.. r Agent. innt . .l)72 tim .7 SANI'L A. DU YZ. their Attorney. A VALEARLE FARM AT PRIVATE SALE. The saltecrilier offers ai private ale his Valuable Farm of ono hundred mad Menu-four acres and oinet).-mix perches of land situate In Durham Towashitt. Ilneks county. Fri., stljoining binds o Cantlibell and Kramer. William S. 1.0111(. David Laub ich and Pet r Latibuth. Th. , ;non In situated on the ourth Oda of Durham Creak sad has n warm southern exposure nod la 0110 of the most 'redo thee tod convenleaLy located farms In the upper end of the campy. There twills. Oil womb.. lent water power of tiv.tnly fivo feet lowland full hoeing formerly bor. 1146.41 for 14411' mill purp.o+ The.o a ant. flebtocy of Oak nail Chestnut tiniltor on the premises for fuel, fencing nod building materials ; and alto u variety of Gull tress. The improvetnenis thereon ennrlst of a double MI S'PONE DWELLING DOUSE. two stories limit. 4 , by al loot. with Stone Kitchen ' gitachso ; D.re. .trey stone Baru. 4.1 by Con feet ; also, Corn Crib. Frame Sty, Frame Wagon Dense and other out-buildings. Thetis la it neiinalniling well of water near tlp, door and ruunlag stream AI the Barn. The farm well fenced and conveolently divided tato fields. couveolent to stoles 111111 i, blacksmiths. school. and church., and is sunned boos , en liprlagtowu und Meg olsville tAtout 3 miles from either. Tents:—About oue-half of the purchase moldy to cash, and the rornalod..r so remain in the premises no the par ting nosy agree upon. JOHN II ()OPT. Epringtoico, Duel., Co, Pa• A HANDSOME MOUSTACHE! 1 MOlNTaellt. PROF. ST. CROIX'S V ItkINCII COld- W 111/IRMO+. POUND. the Oredl HAIR CC MI W hit. aPtPeret:llE. will produ e a luxurl •rt t SIOIIeTACIIE WIIISKEItti. ' or CS lII , KEIttI uu the enemata et Nee. Pleaxaut la on. Pout to our edamss un receipt of Fifty Ceuht. II T. BOND. CHEMIST, 'UNTIL and CllrafNUr SM., PHILA.. N. E. Cor. T f.1.21'72.17 . w 3. H. SCHENCK, M. D., I.l3llmlPlrbiti. Lrgal Xaticro. 11. Adminlotrator I EMPLOY NO PEDDLERS! I DO NOT PEDDLIC MYSELF( I HAVE NO AGENTS! AMERICAN HOTEL, ALLENTOWN. PA OFFICE, NO. 10 (Near Parlor) Z 7 *OTI ER f#I,* " Cr TEO 111 EN V. 1 014 ," C c I _moRER ENT U L S Y SF S K Pot Wye Bob', 5150. - NEW YORK CITY. Offers those who are EV ering from Weak and Defective Eight, his BRAZILIAN V PEBBLE BM 0414 att ‘, CRYSTAL TRADE MARK_ GLASSSPECTACLES ! Superior to Any Other in Use ! Mold only by MORRIS BERNHARDT SPECTACLE AND, OP TRIA h -VA NUFA CTVRER The Advantages of these Spectacles over all others are I. THEY CAN BE WORN WITH PERFECT ease ror any length of I inw at 0110 sitting, giving tistonishing clearness or vision, by candle or any other artificial lI tlit, coniturt •to the spectacle wearer hitherto unknown. 2. 110 W To SELECT GLASSES.—It requires professional guidance, even when n good article is oll'ored. Doctor Bernhardt not only has the hest ti lasses that eon be found in the market, but carefully examines the eyes,and gives Indis pensable advice as to the proper selection of them. TESTIMONY OF RECOMMENDATIONS HEDICA I. rIENThEMEN PROFESSORS OF THE IMIREST OP TIIA L.VIC TALENT IN A Toll , N. PA., poTTSI'ILhE, - RICA DINO, LANCAsTER, EASTON, ' SCRANTON. (1.1 II LISLE cIIA BER , BURO, p.i , ARI D A I. I. TEE PRINCIPAL CITIES OF THE UNITED STATES. ME=MONEMM • • • IT .4 FFORDS TO STATE that I have carefully examined Doctor Bern hardt's collection of tilasses for the eyes, and from his explanation of the manner lit which lie adapts them to imperfect vision, I alll fully sat isfied that he'llairouglily comprehends the sci ence of Optics. and that lie Is practically emi nently skillful In the adaptation Of Instruments to. the relief of all hams of imperfect, vision within the scope of relief without au operation. I soli essisit,Tmissl,ln my own 101110110 f the DO, tor's merits lii tins testimony id the most reliable andpronslinnit moilloal men various Mlles In tlio Stntes, I most cheerfully eusiononil Min to sill with whom my opinion 11111 y liaise any weight. MARTIN, M. U. A t.i.nN•rowN, Pa., Jan. 2, 1872. FTER .1 MORO EXAMINATION ml the principles upon which you adapt your Glasses to detective or impaired vision, and a close Investigation Inloyonr clatlmx to thorough ness in the application of those principles to Ow eye, it gives us pleasure to hear testimony to the fact of your preemlnenee In the science of otion and the remarkable skill and !saltily with which von practically demonstrate yourself in this liranch of scientllle investigations. It le a matter 01 the greatest moment to those using glassek for the eye to avail themselves of the rare opportu nity ctfered them by your presence In sorrily to bore Glasses properly whipted to theirparticulur JNO. ROM IG it: eWes, M. 1). MEMN=Mni I HAVE EXAMINED .4 LARGE VARIETY of I the.ses lintouraetured by 1 lr. Bernhardt, at Berlin, Prussia, and take 1111101 pleasure in el/1111111.11111 . 1114 111111011111 I.lllllle who are In need of 111. seri:lees. From the Initialer at testimonial's that I have seen 1 tun convinced that lie will be stble to give satisfaction to all who may apply to ' Yours, ete., E. Cl. MAHNIN, M. D. V IT GiVES 11E GREAT PLEASURE TO inform my friends that 1 beennte aequainted with Dr. Morris Bernhardt, in Iteadltig, l'a. , in June, lig), anti there bought of him a pair of 111 H exeellefft ti lasses whleh rendered exeetlent ser vice unto me ever slime and I Joyfully recom mend him to all who may 811111,i ill fond of his survives. W AI. S. 31 EN NIG, Pastor of Evan. Lutheaan St. Pattl'N of Allentown, Pa. I=E ME=I E 2 DR. .3r. BERN II AR DTIDIAR • 8 • 111::4 beg to express to you the th•eil Nen:W.li I feel fur the fonfesslonal klioloess extended to toe by which with eye-sight Impaired by years of upplicat lon and study, f stn tow minified to read t write with initially," of vision equal to the it of youth. .May your honorable and useful 11 he long be spared [list humanity may enjoy the selentific skill of one to eminently qualified in mind and 'heart to do good to his fellow'-area. With best wishes for your success I remain Yours Truly, F. FA its, Pastor of St. John's Ev. Lutheran Church. • DR. N. BERNHARDT, Br EXHIBITING his Instruments unit especially the Wassesof his own preparation. eaVe satisfactory proof of Ids experience and skill as an Oculist and'Optlehin. This Judgment. is continued by numerous testi Honda's in his possession from selentille Intelli gent nip' Influential Men residing lit different Slalom acid Terrdorles of our country. I ran, therefore, recommend him to all who may be afflicted with weak eyes or Impaired sight os person well qualified to allord relief by furnish ing them with n Imitable pair of biasses. N. S. STRASSLIPHOM Pastor of Zlon's Reformed Congregation. ALLENTOWN. Pa., January 24,1872: DR. MORRIS BERNHARDT HAS FUR— ihilled me with a pair of War:lllßn Pebble Glasses cinch suit my eyes exactly. From personal ex. derletwe I can cubit idly advise alLpersons whose natural vision requires the supplementsofart to avail themselves of the Iha•tor's skin. He has exhibited to me credentials from einthent Pity -1•1101111,1 slid Ministers, with many of whom I 11111 personally acquainted.' Ile Is evidently nn Op ; tleian who utaderstands his profession mall thoroughly. . J. W. WOOD, Pastor Presbyterian Clutrch• ALmisioWN, Pa., January 21, 1872. IM=:l=M:3= DR. DER: WARM S CRYSTALS ARR UN doutitetkiv very clear awl perfect, and ids system of adjusting them to various conditions of the eve seems to fully Just I ly the very Ilitt tiring tes timonials he hits received (ruin leading clans 1111 d others in various parts of the litilitAl !Mates. WM. It. (MIES, Rector of Grace Church. .==Ml:== HAVING I IIAT) A .RERSONAL INTERVIEW s•lth lir. Bernhardt, COIIVIIIVeIi If lII'. etninont skill ILK an Optician and ()culls'. I take plaastire In I,olllllll,llding him In Ills pr( • fossional capacity to all stun his Tier• vices. JAMES S. CARPEN'rEIt, M. I). We cordially endorse the above: D. W. BLAND. M. D. GEO. W. 'MOWN. M. D. • A. It. II A LisEttsTADT. M. J. W. SCHENCK, Icotor first Presbyterian Ch , l irt r lA I. PEAItCE, Pastor M. E. Church, Potts ville. to. EO. W. SMI TAW, Pastor second- Presbyterian P Church, Pottsville, a. Testimonial:: kl 111 b r to the 11110V0 may be neon at M. llernhanlt's 4:11Iee I roin the meet reliable and well-known gentlemen of the United Staten, among whom are: Horatio Seymour. ex-Oovernor of New York R. H. Penton, ex-Oov. of New York. A. O. Curtin. ek•Ciov. of Penney'vault. 11. B. Hay, Governor of Ohio. O.Y. Morton, ex.Oov.of Indiana. Alexander ltamoty, ex.O.ty. of Minnesota. Hoary A. Swill, ex-llov. of Minueeota Hiehard Yale% ex , lio•. of Minot,. H. 11. Patten. ex.Oov. of)llabama. Joseph B• Crown. ex-Owir.of fieoretia. Jouuthen Worth, ex•Ooty. of North Carolina. John OM Monter, ex-Boy. of Alabama. • James L. Orr, ex•OoV, of South Carolina. READLV(7. PA...Varela 27, ISM' MARTIN LUTHER. M. D. " C. P. AIcHAULEY, Paator of the 11 Reformed Much, Itesduly, Pa. JOSE..IICOBLENTZ, M. D. H. MURRAY , NEIDMAN, AL D. LLEW M ELLYN BEAVER, I. D. C. 11, HUNTER. M. D E. J. RICH ARDA, PaHor of Pre,bylerlart Church. HEN. ACHAIUCKER, Paßtor of elt James' Lathers' Church, Reading, Pa. • LANCASTER, PA.. May 24,1868. JOHN L. ATI,KR. M D. . . HENRY CAiPR\TRR. M D. H. E. MOHLENISERU, hl D. E 0 REENVVALD. U U., Parlor Church orliely Trial tr, Laucacter, Pa. EASTON, PA., February 10, MIL TRAIL!. GREEN, M C JENNINGS M AMA) MAP M . D D. EDW UI I) sWIFT, M D. JMJUNKIN, MD sablllEb SAN DT, M D. EDO Aft, Pastor of Reformed (Dutch) lihuralt, EDMUND BELYOUIt, Paator of tit. John • Lutheran Church, Easton. Pa. Continuation of Dr. Bernhardt's; . HCRANTON, PA.,.Cct. 111, 160.9 Mill THROOP, M D. It A AI:MIRK, MD. . .14 Y IMAM, 31 D. • L 110 RACE ADD, M 1) . OIAMBER.4IIUIIO, PA., Juno 23, 1871. . A II SENHENT. 51 D. Jl. SU t EIIOT M D. • WM II BOYLE, M D. JC 111011AII11o, MD. JOHN IIItNTOOMEILY. M D. HAM' L, O LANE, 51 0. P H DAVIS. Pa.tor oi tho lot Reformed en arch. LUTII ER A 0 itTWA LIE Pentor 'lnt Lutheran Church .1 A IRA WFO RU Pastor of Cho Falling spring Prouby !orlon IIA SCHENCK M D. CARLISLE:, PA., Juno 18, 1889. ' A .1 11F.RMAN, WM W DALE. Si D. H E/FER. NI D. REV C P WINO, Pentor of tho Fire Preeby . terlan rim rel. W5l t: EVER RYT.' Rector of St Joh o'n Church: JOEL SWARTZ. Pantor of tho Lutheran Church. (11SSIII,TATION FREE. houin from 9 n 01 to 5 p m • N. IL—Owing to 0110 HAtelliontA &nowhere. Dr. Born bnrllt will not remain hero but fur a plum limo only. jau3l.dhw LUMBER I LUMBER !! WHOLESALE AND RET A TTi HOFFMAN'S STEAM SAW MILL , AND LUMBER YARD I KINDLING! BILLS CUT TO ORDER OFFICE AT THE MILL, FRONT AND LINDEN STS. WHITE AND BLACK OAK SAW, LOOS warded. for which tee highent mnricat price will be pm Id upon deity d.w July 1247 CAUTION. To famill.n who nee the Kerenene or Combination Oils, Kern...no Olt Is not safe antes. Ito from 110 to 120 degrees which yon can always Sad atthe well known China Store of • WM. REIMER, • 611 11A311LTON STREET, ALLENTOWN, PA.. Almo t ,tnything In the CHINA, GLASS or QUEENS WARE. Cue at tho vet) , lowest rotor. and always the very hem . ENGLISII WARE, , warranted not to graze. • N. B.—ln 'Tiara to the Combination OIL which anent. tell yon In nou•expl.elve, I have thoroughly le.led Wand I nay It be Exploxive Desnorro.. I coo refer to Ste onolmions In ono week to thin t fly where the Combina tion It was In ore. oettb d WM. REIMER. A. H. WITTMAN, NOTARY PUBLIC AND CIVIL ENGLIVAER T. B. LEISENRING INSURANCE AGENT, FIRE, LIFE, AND LIVE STOOS WITTMAN LEISENRING Real Estate Agents and Scriveners. 70S HAMILTON STREET, (Up-Stairs.) Have aeon their hooka Rome very desirable properteel which will lie sold at raw. Prices and on easy teVne among which are the following : . . 142 N, Fleventh Street. .2-r1 N. Ninth Street. 321 N. Fountain Street. 433 N. Seventh Street ail 'Hamilton Stteet .. • 1200. Ninth Street. 843 •• Vacant Lehi Itt nil parte let North Tomb Street. the city. 144 S. Filth Street. I D RS. JORDAN d: DAVIESON, Proprletoris of tho Gallery of Anatomy and Museum of Science, SO7 CIIESTNUT ST., PHILA. Flavejrvit putilliihed a dow edition of their lecturos i cons Wining most valuable information on (be cannel, well• gnencee and treatment of diseases of the reproductive system. with 11000000 on 241.1.011A0R !Yid the VitriOnil causes of the 1.11,18 OP INA/1111101.1, with full lostructione lDr its complete restoration; also o chapter on VONRHE AL IN- ViIrTION, and the NRANn or CM., bhiog the mud COll - R 111.41 et: WORK on the oubjoct ever pet published— comprlaing pogo. Mailed free to any adateas for Twenty. eve co.", Address Drs. JORDAN &DAMSON, CONSULTING OFFICE, - 1625 Filbert Street, Philadelphia. Rep 21-1 v d4sr MADAME STEE.:L, 1313 Chestnut Street, Philadelphia, received from Para the latest Spring styles POLONAISE BUSTLES AND La Victorion Kangaroo dr Pink. BUSTLE PKIRTS for tr..in and prom undo dresaer. Pork W.wly & rhildron's Corowto,o.ll at popular price. ly w) T RIAL LIST FOR APRIL TERM COMIVIENCING MONDAY. APRIL•isi, 181.2. 1 Elltaboth Herman vs Lnllin Powder Company. 2 Very A smite. v Mir., 3 Amanda P, Herman vs slims. 4 D.Lvid ,rimsdt vs Henry E 04Inniler. .1 !loutish .41 Bowen.. Exorntor as Thom. Bowen. Craig vs William Yorbenlnch. 7 Charles Lnudenberger vs Booboo Engelman and Wit- Deft. Hank no Edwin J Vonog. f ioorap Ott vo Jain , N W Folly, nod James larnmelt. In Hertz., Hob., A C., vs Worst at Scbruoyer. II Tin gh non Weber no Joseph Andrews 12 F ti Hiltons vs Joseph loixarus and Joseph Maticheit 13 o,,loten Hear vs VVilllnm MOyer 14 Ad.lin Henn in v Jacob aliberg, Lewin Dorwird and .1..1p. Hoffman. late pa• biers. 15 Thomas Litrenberger no Leonard Mover and Solomon Melee Supervi•oro of Upper Macungie township 1.1 Jaeol, li Konitnerer-vx .1 A Ettinger and Elias Felix. 17 ~ o lot ion Minnie!, and wife vs kvan soll nud wife. IA Abraham Diefenderfer vs lone.. A Katz, 10 Jane I. Simmons. Assignee vs Hope Hulling Mill Co. tuivid Srhinover vs eharbk Morn. 21 Bodine Manufacturing Co vs D L b l' Buchman vs John !lodge!, Ti Inane W Steminser v.s Aaron Fahringer. irn v.! ilo , ry Kemmerer. 2.5 same no jilhe SCI,VNItt. ,RI ',MO no I'. tor Halud. Jaeoll F Stenist and wife no Joseph Singlet. 28 Tremiertown L A 11 Ansuelation no Thomas .7 Rehr hoe( and Henry Hitinbart. 29 Henry II Mel, on John Sullivan. 30 Edmund J Hornet on al vs Allnot Sehool District. J, S. DILLINHEIL Prothonotary. FINA,NIIIII. STATIIENT OF TUF). LEI' lOU COUNTY MUT L FIRESURAIS CE; CO3IPANY. the tollowit g I. the account of Evan Outh, Tmourat. of the Lehigh Comity Mutual Fire Inenrauce Company: Balance In bend freln hid year Premiums received Juin the year Alnuttut of MX reelect on Ku. :1 MiliCiStalnit The seta Trensorer crevas stllowanro for money mad eat during tho year.. per ' , rein.: Jan IS, 1871, Paid to Sol. rirloonter, tavern MIL., 412.2 Cu Jan 15, pald to Daniel !Winer. tavern bill 7 65 Feb 4, do 'John Mohr, d LI Oa May 6, do Wlllllllll Berndt, do lo Oh Arts. 12, do .1,..11111.11 Mot/. do • 1110 Nov 6 do lie, jillillo eel d 0.... ...... 191 Ito do Ilalnex & W0r111411,111.11111111/..•....• 11 ul d Do do do' o do 6.1 75 Do do do do do :91 NI Do do Erbentr h Mohr for holding elertlou 2 111 Do do R. 1r dell. to 1et10g.... ....... ..... 21173 Ito ea, 1 XollO d ralloliA and los dned 6I ..)3 3,66 Do do o o Do' do Dlrnelo , a free for regolsr tnevtlfig daring tour If 7 ICI 3 CO 21 PO 6 CO 120(1 Aro Pro. Tree4orrert Teen. CstlibotManx rt•rg Pahl .1 11 It. Hololtortt for collretlng ten Petri Wm. 11. !Intorno!. ........... Patti Jot.. Weaver Doe. 141, pold Jon.. Hurt:oil tor nIg01011:110 polleten At I; om 14 .1) Deo al ro peal Hiram Emil:tom for bI9IIIOIII4D , IIMint et 0 rettlA 109 Halancn In hands of Treosurer. W *1 1 .9'15 173 0 " () . Net Increase deem( the year. We, the uoderAlgued Auditors do hereby certify that tre have enetnitted the account of Even Trepan- DUr tor she year ending on the 3 Ili day of Di cerober, A, . 1671. nod find a bainue4 in the hands of said Treasurer or oue &hemmed bye handiest And thin y•olua dollar, sat elaloy-three Catria. Wiwi.a nor hands end orals this. sixth day of .lartuiry t A.. L. lfi7J. MODSII. PEARbON, 1' KT W too • • TIMIK ALZAUItr. I=l e clereuces. CORSETS I 124 Et • La JAI' . =II .16.174. 41, BYO N•
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